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Apple stock barely budges after $599 MacBook Neo reveal as Wall Street weighs margin risks
4 March 2026
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Apple stock barely budges after $599 MacBook Neo reveal as Wall Street weighs margin risks

New York, March 4, 2026, 10:36 ET — Regular session.

  • Apple stock edged up roughly 0.1% in morning trading following the debut of its $599 MacBook Neo.
  • The entry-level laptop aimed at budget shoppers hits pre-order this Wednesday; it lands in stores starting March 11.
  • Investors are eyeing Apple’s ability to boost low-end sales, but they’re wary: higher memory prices could pinch margins.

Apple edged up Wednesday, tacking on about 0.1% to trade at $263.94. Shares bounced between $261.47 and $265.85 after the tech giant introduced its $599 MacBook Neo, marking an unusual entry below the $700 laptop mark. The Invesco QQQ Trust, which shadows the Nasdaq-100, climbed around 1.5%.

This shift is significant: Apple wants to broaden its reach as the PC market gets more price-driven. Offering a lower-cost Mac might attract students and those shopping for their first device. Still, the company ends up facing the old dilemma—selling more machines, but with slimmer margins on each.

Apple is calling the MacBook Neo its “most affordable laptop ever,” pricing the new 13-inch model with a Liquid Retina display and A18 Pro chip at $599. For education buyers, the tag drops to $499. Pre-orders open Wednesday; Apple says the device will hit shelves March 11. “We’re incredibly excited to introduce MacBook Neo, which delivers the magic of the Mac at a breakthrough price,” said John Ternus, senior vice president of Hardware Engineering, in a statement. Apple

Apple is targeting Chromebook buyers and the budget Windows laptop crowd, Reuters reported, shifting the company into a market it’s mostly observed from afar. The new laptop comes with 8 gigabytes of unified memory—used jointly by the processor and graphics—even as the ongoing global memory chip shortage drives up parts prices, according to the report. “The real question … is how it balances cost, performance and brand positioning,” said Francisco Jeronimo, vice president of client devices at IDC. Reuters

The MacBook Neo sticks to the essentials: 13-inch display, 8GB RAM, storage set at either 256GB or 512GB, according to The Verge. Features like Thunderbolt and MagSafe didn’t make the cut, as the company aims for a lower price point. Touch ID? Only on the 512GB model, The Verge noted.

Just a day after Apple rolled out its latest high-end MacBook Air and MacBook Pro machines, both powered by M5-family chips and offering more storage at the base level, a lower-priced model has made its debut, Reuters reported via Investing.com. The refreshed 13-inch MacBook Air kicks off at $1,099 with 512GB, while the 14-inch MacBook Pro featuring the M5 Pro chip lists at $2,199 and includes a full terabyte from the start, according to the report. The story also pointed to steeper prices for DRAM and NAND flash—components essential for memory and storage—as chipmakers channel more supply toward AI-driven needs.

Apple bulls see it this way: expand the installed base, keep users locked into the ecosystem. A lower-priced Mac might draw in new customers—potentially just the entry point before they move on to pricier services and hardware with better margins.

Traders are weighing if current pricing packs enough punch to make a dent in a “good enough” laptop market, still ruled at the lower end by Google’s Chrome OS and Microsoft’s Windows. Apple, for its part, usually sits out that scuffle.

There’s a hitch here. Low-end hardware doesn’t leave much room for error, especially as the company heads into volatile component pricing. Should supply dry up—or if consumers decide 8GB just won’t cut it for more demanding tasks—the Neo might move units but still let the company down on both mix and margins.

Early order trends and delivery schedules are on the radar for investors, but a clearer picture should emerge once MacBook Neo lands in stores March 11.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors. Follow Khadija Saeed on Google News.

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